Guest Post in a personal capacity by Philip Grant
Architect’s view of Brent’s 250 home Cecil Avenue development.
On 14 March this year, Martin’s post “Wembley Housing Zone: Never mind the gloss –
what are the details?” shared with us
a Brent Council press release, about its deal with Wates to finally build the
250 homes at Cecil Avenue, which it had received full planning consent for in
February 2021. The blog included “links” to several of the guest posts I’d
written since August 2021, urging the Council to include more genuinely
affordable homes for rent in the project, especially homes at Social Rent level
which the 2020 Brent Poverty Commission said should be the priority.
My “parody” Brent Council Homes publicity photograph (from November
2021).
Since 2021, Brent’s plans had been to allow its “developer partner” to
sell 152 of the homes on the former Copland School site privately, with only 37
of the 250 for London Affordable Rent, and the other 61 as “intermediate”
Council housing (either shared ownership or Intermediate Rent level).
You would have thought that when they arranged additional funding from
the GLA, to allow for more affordable homes to be delivered as part of this
Wembley Housing Zone project, Brent would have celebrated with another press
release, telling us about this “good news” story. Instead, I only discovered it
when I spotted an item on the Forward Plan page of the Council’s website, as I
was checking whether another item had been included there. It was about a Key Decision
made by the Corporate Director, Communities and Regeneration, in April 2023:-
There was a “Officer Key Decision Report” on the website, but (true to
form) the appendices to it were both “exempt”, so that the press and public
were not allowed to find out ‘information relating to the financial or business
affairs of any particular person (including the authority holding that
information)’. The Report did, however, give an outline of what the amended
agreement with the GLA involved:-
My various attempts, since August 2021, to get Brent to include more
genuinely affordable homes at Cecil Avenue, using additional GLA funding where
possible, have been ignored, dodged or blocked. I was told that anything other
than what the Council already planned would be impossible, because the scheme
would not be viable. Now they had an extra c.£10.5m, how many extra affordable
homes would they be able to provide?
I had to submit a Freedom of Information Act request to find out, but
“Wembley Matters” can (at last) share the Good News!
· Instead of only 37 of the Cecil Avenue homes for London Affordable Rent,
there will now be 59. 35 of these will be family-sized (3 or 4-bed) homes.
· 36 of the Cecil Avenue Council homes will be for Shared Ownership (of
which 9 will be family-sized).
· 3 of the Cecil Avenue Council homes will be “Other” affordable homes.
(Does that mean at Intermediate Rent?)
· As before, 152 of the homes being built by Brent Council at Cecil Avenue
will be for private sale by Wates (including 20 family-sized).
My title does say ‘Some Good News’. The other part of the Wembley
Housing Zone project, across the road at Ujima House, was meant to have ALL of
its 54 flats for London Affordable Rent to Council tenants. The revised figures
for this block are now:
· 32 for London Affordable Rent (including all 8 family-sized flats).
· 22 for Shared Ownership.
So, the original proposed number of Wembley Housing Zone London
Affordable Rent homes was 91 (37 + 54), and the revised number is 91 (59 + 32).
Perhaps that is why Brent did not want to draw attention to the extra funding
they’d negotiated from the GLA!
The only improvement from the extra GLA funding, and that is genuinely
to be welcomed, is that more of them will be family-sized homes for affordable
rent, and more will be delivered earlier (Ujima House still only has the
outline planning permission approved in February 2021).
Of the original proposed 61 “intermediate affordable homes”, 58 have now
been positively identified as being for shared ownership. But didn’t Brent’s
Cabinet, just last week, decide to sell off the 23 shared ownership
homes it had acquired at the Grand
Union development, because the Council
does not have 'the knowledge, experience and the capacity to effectively sell
and manage' shared ownership homes?
Placard from a demonstration against Shared Ownership.
The Report to the 17 July Cabinet meeting clearly showed that shared
ownership is well above the affordability level of most families in Brent, and admitted:
‘… the market and demand for Shared Ownership,
particularly in the latter quarter of 2022 was and has remained turbulent. This
is both in terms of too many shared ownership homes available in the market and
appetite and demand for these homes reducing.’
In a November 2022 guest post, I set out the reality of Brent’s Affordable Council Housing programme,
and why they should not include any shared ownership homes. But the decision
makers at the Civic Centre are still pressing on with their flawed policies!
Cllr. Shama Tatler fronting a publicity photo at the Cecil Avenue site
in March 2023.
Brent’s March 2023 press release about its Wembley Housing Zone deal
with Wates began by claiming: ‘More much-needed housing will soon be a reality
following an agreement to build 304 new homes in Wembley.’ From the hard hats
and “high-vis” jackets in the photograph that came with it, you might believe
that heavy machinery was already at work on the Council-owned Cecil Avenue
site, which has been vacant for at least three years.
The Cecil Avenue site from the top deck of a bus, 26 June 2023.
In the extract from the April 2023 Key Decision Report above, it says
that ‘start on site [was] recorded on 27 March 2023’. When I went past on the
last Monday in June, there was no machinery, no workers and no progress on the
Cecil Avenue site, just two portacabins. My recent guest post, 1 Morland Gardens – an Open Letter to the
Mayor of London, explains what is required
for a “start on site” for GLA funding, and it appears this has not yet
happened.
It appears that the ‘will soon be a reality’ actually means ‘by 31
December 2026’. Some eventual good news, but I still believe that Brent
could have done so much better than 59 “genuinely affordable” homes for rent to
Council tenants as part of its 250 home Cecil Avenue development.
Philip Grant.